The Day of the Jack Russell (Mystery Man)

The Day of theJackRussell

Colin Bateman

The right of Colin Bateman to be identified as the Author ofthe Work has been asserted by him in accordance with theCopyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblanceto real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

For Andrea, Matthew and Patch

‘No Alibis’ is a real bookshop in Belfast, there is an MI5 regional headquarters nearby and (usually) a Chief Constable. One or two other places also exist in real life. However, this book is a work of fiction. While the setting may be real, the plot and characters are made up. Nothing I have written should be taken to describe or reflect on real people.

1

It was the Tuesday before Christmas Day whenThe Case of the Cock-Headed Manwalked into No Alibis, the finest mystery bookstore in all of, um, Belfast.

In some ways he was lucky to get me, because with business being so quiet I had resorted to letting my mother woman the till for that short part of the day when she could manage to keep off the booze, i.e. between the hours of nine and eleven twenty-nine in the morning. If he had walked in ten minutes earlier he would have walked straight out again, because while still undoubtedly sober, Mother is not one for suffering fools or anyone gladly and she’s gotten ten times worse since her stroke. She has always been ugly and mean, but she used to restrict her glares and tempers and violence and venom and sarcasm to members of her immediate family, but since the stroke she has expanded her circle of viciousness to include distant cousins, vague acquaintances, most other members of the human race and several dogs. Mother is wired differently to you or me. A stroke usually affects just one side of the body, but she has lost the power in her right leg and left arm, making her appear lopsided from whatever angle you care to look at her, although most people don’t, and stagger from side to side like the drunk she is when she tries to walk. It is funny to watch her. When she’s drinking she now only has to consume half as much as before to get legless. And half of that again usually drools out of her mouth on to her blouse, because another side effect of the stroke is the loss of all feeling in her lower lip.

But as it happened,The Case of the Cock-Headed Manwalked in just as Mother finished. In fact, he held the door open for her as she left. Since her stroke I’ve had the disabled ramp removed from outside the shop, so it takes her a while to manoeuvre her walking frame and calipered leg down the high step and on to the pavement. The man with the Sidney Sidesweep and goatee beard smiled and offered her his arm and said, ‘Can I give you a hand, dear?’

Mother glared at him for the briefest moment before spitting out: ‘Fuckaff!’

Her diction isn’t great with her face the way it is. Before the stroke she looked like she’d been punched by Sonny Liston; now she sounds like it as well.

Mother’s job – she tells her cronies that she’s head of customer relations, which would actually be quite funny if she wasn’t serious – is a sad reflection on the changing face of the book trade, wherein I cannot afford to hire good and proper help, but have to rely on friends and family and idiot students to fill in for those few hours when I need to concentrate on stocktaking, e-mails, stalking my ex-girlfriend and actuallyreading. I have to know what’s out there. While I am not entirely convinced by the recent vogue for Scandinavian crime fiction – who’s to say if it’s the author who is a genius, or his translator? Also, it’s difficult to care if a Norwegian gets murdered – my customers expect me to know the authors and to be able to help them navigate to their best work. You would expect a brain surgeon to be up to date on the latest operating procedures, and you would be shocked if a butcher served you up half a pound of gristle because he didn’t know any better, yet you can walk into a major bookstore and ask if Hammett’sThe Glass Keyis superior toThe Thin Manand they’d look at you like you were on day release from a secure mental hospital, which, incidentally, is something I know all about. So I need a little time each day to keep up to date, and my best time for reading is in the mornings, when I’m not so groggy from the anti-psychotic medicine I order on-line from a Good Samaritan in Guadalajara, Mexico.

It was areallyquiet time of year in No Alibis, and not just because customers were put off by Mother’s fearsome visage glaring out of the window and daring them to enter. Although books continue to make fantastic gifts, people no longer have the time to browse at Christmas or to ask for guidance from an expert. They go to one of the big chains and push a trolley around, piling them high and buying them cheap, like beans, or pasta, or onions, or potatoes, or rice, or tinned peaches, or fig rolls, or Tuc biscuits, or midget gems. But books are not beans. It’s not all about profit. It’s about the book. You have to appreciate the effort that goes into the writing of a book. The love and sacrifice. The years of torment. The long and tortured journey from first inkling of idea to appearance on a shelf. Nobody ever cared that much about the genesis of a bean. Once they finally appear, so many fine books are ignored, remaindered and pulped because they fail to find ame. My place in society, my role in life, is to select the finest crime fiction, and then make sure that it connects with the right people, a thankless task, particularly as there are so few right people around. No shortage of thewrongpeople. One example of the wrong people – and I have learned that youcanoften judge a book by its cover – was the beardy man approaching the counter without even the pretence of looking for a book. Despite his polite offer of assistance to Mother and his refusal to react angrily to her abuse, something about him immediately put me on edge. Perhaps it was because he wore the kind of extravagant clothes that people buy to try to disguise the fact that they have no personality.

‘Do you have internet access?’ he asked brusquely.

‘Yes thanks.’

‘No, I mean, to show you something.’

‘No thanks.’

He was a pedlar with a lazy attitude to direct selling. He was trying to hock his wares by showing me a sales video atmyexpense over the internet.

He smiled whitely. ‘I understand you meddle in crime-solving.’

‘No.’

‘Oh. I was given to understand . . .’

‘I don’t meddle.’

Arrogance is no bad thing in crime-fighting, and God knows it’s compulsory in the book trade. He wouldn’t have known it, but I was quietly pleased by his presence in the shop. My reputation was clearly growing. Booksellers who use their expertise to solve baffling crimes are pretty thin on the ground. In fact, booksellers are pretty thin on the ground. Indeed, I am pretty thin on the ground, thanks to my diet, and allergies, and incurable diseases, and broken heart, and the economy. But people come to me because I am their last resort. Because the crimes against them are too difficult or trivial for the conventional forces of law and order to tackle or be bothered with. I glanced at my watch as if I had an appointment. When he didn’t immediately volunteer anything, I snapped a pleasant ‘Sorry, is there something else I can help you with?’

The smile remained fixed, like his teeth. ‘You do know who I am?’

I shook my head. ‘Nope.’

‘You really don’t recognise me?’

He had tiny incredulous eyes and the bags under them sagged with middle age, giving the lie to his Botoxed brow. His beard was, I’m sure, perfectly fine; except I’m allergic to beards. Food festers in them. Ticks and bugs and spiders breed in them. I hate beards. I hate people who wear beards. Even false ones. Like Santa. But now that I studied him, there was somethingvaguelyfamiliar about him. I have made many enemies in my perilous work as a crime-fighter and bookseller, and I have to admit that despite his smile, my hand sought the comfort of my mallet, one of several weapons I have taken to keeping beneath the counter.

‘Who are you,exactly?’ I asked, taking care to keep my voice flat, so that he couldn’t tell that I was now in a state of high alert. ‘And what do you want?’

‘You seriously don’t recognise me? But you see me every day.’

I shook my head.

‘Billy Randall?’ He pulled his shoulders back, put his hands on his hips and gave his voice a mid-Atlantic twang. ‘I’m Billy Randall – fly me?’

He raised an eyebrow for added effect.

‘Ah,’ I said.

Ididknow him, after all. His head and shoulders, sixty feet wide, stared down at me from billboards in the south, east, north and west of this city of twenty-three stories. Billy Randall ran a low-cost, no frills airline and holiday company, Billy Randall Air, or BRA. It flew the great unwashed to cheap destinations, many of them in the Third World, most of them permanently braced for natural disaster or constantly teetering on the edge of civil war or desperately trying to recover from a crashed economy. People clamoured for his flights and holidays while at the same time despising his mugging arrogance, because quite often they were cheaper than taking a taxi and having a night out in their home city. He had a blazing self-confidence, pots full of chutzpah, and had made his millionsdespitenot endearing himself to anyone. Hislook at me. The Northern Irish are quick to judge, and they dislike people who put their heads above the parapet unless they have a genuine talent, in which case they then worship them to death.

Billy Randall smiled beatifically.

‘Billy Randall, of course,’ I said, warmer now, because despite the fact that I had a growing urge to beat him with the mallet, he was rich, and I was poor, and if he was wanting to talk to me he clearly had a problem, and a fool and his money are soon parted. ‘Sorry.’

‘I wanted to show you something. On YouTube. Have you heard of YouTube?’

‘I invented it.’

‘You . . .’

‘I can’t talk about it. Litigation.’

He looked at me. He smiled. ‘Well could I show you something? Go on to the site and just type in my name.’

I turned to my PC and slowly picked out the letters. I am a recovering myopic dyslexic. There was just the one entry on YouTube for Billy Randall. I clicked on it and saw his billboard poster in some busy and vaguely familiar-looking part of town, with traffic flowing past. We watched it silently for twenty seconds.

‘What’s the . . .?’

‘Wait.’

And then there was sniggering on the soundtrack as the camera followed a hooded youth carrying a set of ladders across the traffic. I say ‘youth’ because he was dressed in the teenage fashion; for all I saw of him he could have been an old man blessed with vigour.

‘Go for it, Jimbo,’ said an anonymous commentator.

The youth set the ladders against a gable wall, the tip of them just resting against the bottom of the billboard frame, and then he extended them, giving him what appeared to be an extra twelve feet or so and bringing him, as he climbed, level with Billy Randall’s forehead.

I became aware that the gauche travel mogul on the other side of my counter was no longer looking at the screen. He couldn’t bear to watch the youth take a can of spray paint from his hoody and begin to spray what slowly became an enormous cock and balls right in the middle of Billy Randall’s gigantic forehead, although he couldn’t help but listen as the accompanying giggle turned into a raucous cackle.

2

Like many provincial businessmen, Billy Randall had dreamt of transforming himself into an internationally recognised name, a Murdoch or a Branson or even a Heinz. He wanted his smug mug to be recognised in every corner of the globe, the Randall name to become synonymous with success and big bucks.